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The following public lecture might be of interest to folk in the Yale area.
Cheers,
Damian

Murray Bookchin, Social Ecology and American Environmentalism
Damian White, Associate Professor of Sociology, The Rhode Island School of
Design

Dept of Environmental Studies and Forestry, Yale University;  April 14th,
2011
Kroon Hall,  195 Prospect St. New Haven CT 7 pm.

Murray Bookchin first wrote a critique of the use of chemicals in
agriculture in 1952. Six months before Rachel Carson’s wrote Silent Spring
in 1962, he published Our Synthetic Environment, a comprehensive book length
account of post war environmental and urban “crises”. By the mid-1960s,
Bookchin had not only suggested that climate change might well be emerging
as one of the defining political issues of the age but he begun to
systematically rework critical theory along ‘ecological lines’. Despite
these notably accomplishments and Bookchin’s commitment to developing an
‘authentic American radicalism’, Bookchin’s social ecology does not seem to
have found a place in the ‘respectable pantheon’ of American
environmentalism. If one turns to recent anthologies of critical American
environmental thinkers (See McKibben and Gore, 2008), his contribution is
ignored. More generally, since his death in 2006, scholarly interest in his
work has subsided. In this paper, I explore the contours of this
controversial thinker. I suggest that whilst his attempt to develop a
‘social ecology’ is marked by numerous limitations and problems, there are
also a range of critical areas where his work has made a valuable
contribution to American Environmental thought. Specifically, I argue that
Bookchin critique of neo-Malthusian thought and attempt to fashion a social
ecology attentive to multiple forms of social domination anticipates much of
the agenda of contemporary post structuralist political ecology. I suggest
his calls for an ecological politics premised on a ‘liberatory technology’
and a politics of pleasure has much to recommend itself. I suggest his
attention to the ecological promise of the city was farsighted. Finally, I
suggest that his attempt to develop an ecological politics still committed
to humanism and some mode of utopian thought has continued relevance.

Damian F. White is Associate Professor of Sociology in the Department of
History, Philosophy and Social Science at The Rhode Island School of Design.
He has most recently curated the exhibition ‘Green RISD 2010: Nature,
Culture, Innovation’ at the Rhode Island School of Design. Books published
include: Bookchin: A Critical Appraisal (authored, Pluto, 2008);
Technonatures: technologies, natures, spaces and places in the 21stCentury
(co-edited, Wilfred Laurier University Press, 2010); Autonomy, Solidarity,
Possibility: The Colin Ward Read (co-edited AK Press, 2011). Books in
progress include: The Environment, Nature and Social Theory (co-authored,
Palgrave/Macmillian, under contract) and Designing the Future - A Sociology
of Design.